Tanzania’s President John Magufuli Sweeps The Streets On Independence Day

Tanzanian President John Pombe Magufuli surprised onlookers Wednesday December 9, 2015 when he walked out of State House to collect rubbish off the streets, after cancelling Independence Day celebrations for a national clean-up.

 

Magufuli, who took power in November after winning the October 25 elections, has introduced a swathe of austerity cuts and crackdowns on public corruption.

 

Dozens of fishermen joined in the clean-up with their president, who shovelled leaves and plastic rubbish close to a fish market near the presidential palace as a crowd of hundreds looked on.

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“Let us work together to keep our country, cities, homes and workplaces clean, safe and healthy,” the smiling Magufuli said, as he picked up litter with his hands.

 

Street cleaning took place across the economic capital Dar es Salaam, with plumes of smoke rising into the sky as residents burned piles of litter.

 

But this is just what newly elected President John Magufuli did this morning after cancelling today’s usually lavish Independence Day celebrations and ordering Tanzanians to clean-up their neighbourhoods.

 

The scene was replicated across the country, with schools and shops remaining shut as people swept streets, pruned trees, and tidied up their areas from the crack of dawn.

 

Former president Jakaya Kikwete also took part in cleaning in his home town of Chalinze sweeping and gathering rubbish.

 

This is the first time in 54 years that Tanzania has not held celebrations to mark independence from the UK.

 

In many ways, the clean -up exercise was symbolic of President Magufuli’s pledge to remove what many Tanzanians see as the rot in public institutions, and their failure to perform effectively.
Last month, Mr Magufuli said it would be “shameful” to spend huge sums of money on the celebrations when “our people are dying of cholera”.

 

Cholera has killed about 60 people in Tanzania in the last three months – many of them in poor areas which lack proper toilets.

 

Mr Magafuli, nicknamed “The Bulldozer”, was elected in October.

 

 

Credit : Daily Nation

Tanzania’s New President Restricts Foreign Travel For Officials, Cuts Tax Exemptions

Tanzania’s new President John Magufuli, on Tuesday ordered restrictions on foreign travel by government officials and cuts in tax exemptions, signalling the potential start of fiscal belt-tightening measures by his government.

A statement from the president’s office said that “the president had put a halt to all foreign trips by government officials with immediate effect.

“If there is an urgent need for foreign travel by a public official, approval must be granted by the president himself or the Head of Civil Service.’’

The directive is against the backdrop of abuse of public funds by some officials reputed for making frequent foreign trips and flying in first or business class at taxpayers’ expense in a country that is one of the biggest per-capita aid recipients in Africa.
The statement said Magufuli, 56, had instead, ordered government officials to visit villages and other rural parts of Tanzania to address “grievances and problems of the people’’.

The belt-tightening measures are aimed at raising money to finance the government’s plan of providing primary and secondary education to all Tanzanian children free of charge from January next year, the statement said.

“The president has also instructed the Tanzania Revenue Authority to step up revenue collection from large tax payers and curb tax evasion without fear or favour,’’ it said.

Magufuli, whose supporters call him  “the bulldozer’’ for building desperately needed roads across the large nation in his previous post as a cabinet minister, had pledged to introduce a raft of measures to end government excesses and boost revenue collection.

Magufuli, sworn in on Nov. 5 as Tanzania’s fifth president, had pledged to double the east African country’s monthly revenue collection to 1.8 trillion shillings ($843 million) over the next five years.
He also promised to create a special court to oversee all corruption-related issues and vowed zero tolerance for graft.

 

(Reuters/NAN)